Factbox - Should she stay or should she go? Conservative lawmakers on May

LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May lost her parliamentary majority on Friday after a surprisingly poor election performance, throwing her future into doubt.

Below are comments from members of May's Conservative Party on her position:

JACOB REES-MOGG, EUROSCEPTIC LAWMAKER

"I think Mrs May will have a good deal of support. She's only been the leader for under a year, she got it without any opposition, an uncontested election with support up and down the country. I don't think the Conservative Party is so fickle, or such a fair-weather friend as it would not continue to back the prime minister."

ANNA SOUBRY, PRO-EUROPEAN LAWMAKER

"She's in a very difficult place, she's a remarkable and a very talented woman and she doesn't shy from difficult decisions, but she now has to obviously consider her position."

"Theresa did put her mark on this campaign, she takes responsibility as she always does, and I know she will, for the running of the campaign. It was tightly knit group, and it was her group that ran this campaign."

"The change of heart on social care ... it did not make her look the strong and stable prime minister and leader that she had said that she was. That was a very difficult and very serious blow in terms of her own credibility."

IAIN DUNCAN SMITH, FORMER CONSERVATIVE PARTY LEADER

"I just want some stability. She is prime minister, she remains prime minister and the country has to come first."

ED VAIZEY, FORMER CULTURE MINISTER

"I think she can hold on ... going into a hung parliament, to lose our prime minister would be disastrous."

"If she wants to stay on as leader I would support her."

JOHN REDWOOD, EUROSCEPTIC LAWMAKER

"A very very strong mandate for our prime minister, and of course it should be the leader with the most seats in the House of Commons who can win the necessary votes, and Theresa May is in that position today."

NICKY MORGAN, FORMER EDUCATION MINISTER

"Theresa May is obviously a competent, more than capable prime minister... but clearly there has been a misjudgement."

"There are two things: having a government prepared to negotiate Brexit, which I think is what most people in this country now agree needs to happen, and what's going to happen to the Conservative party, which is for us to deal with."

Reporting by William James, Georgina Prodhan and Paul Sandle, editing by Elizabeth Piper